One
in two healthy adults will develop pre-diabetic high blood sugar
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[November 20, 2015] By
Kathryn Doyle
Prediabetes, sometimes called impaired
glucose metabolism, has no clear symptoms, but people with higher than
normal blood sugar based on a blood test should be tested for diabetes
every one or two years, according to the American Diabetes Association.
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“We have known this from previous studies – but what this study adds
is a method of communicating risk in a better way – a person’s
lifetime risk of developing diabetes,” said Dr. Kamlesh Khunti of
Leicester General Hospital in the U.K., who coauthored an editorial
accompanying the new results.
One in three healthy 45-year-olds will develop diabetes in his or
her lifetime, Khunti said.
Researchers from Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam and
the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston used long-term data on
about 10,000 adults in The Netherlands, including medical records,
hospital discharge letters, pharmacy dispensing data and fasting
blood sugar measurements.
They followed people for about 15 years, categorizing their blood
sugar levels according to World Health Organization standards. Blood
sugar levels of 6 millimoles/per liter (108 milligrams per
deciliter) or less are considered normal or healthy. Levels above
6mmol/L and below 7mmol/L (108-128 mg/dl) are considered elevated or
prediabetic, and levels of 7mmol/L or greater are diabetes.
Over about 15 years, a total of 1,148 people developed elevated
blood sugar levels, 828 developed diabetes and 237 started taking
insulin to control their diabetes.
The study team translated these results into population risk levels
at age 45, and found that about half of people would develop
prediabetic blood sugar levels before their death, 30 percent would
develop full blown diabetes and nine percent would start taking
insulin.
About three-quarters of those with elevated blood sugar at age 45
would go on to develop diabetes, and half of those who already had
diabetes would start taking insulin, they report in The Lancet
Diabetes and Endocrinology.
Higher body mass index or waist circumference increased these risks
further.
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hese results were similar to those found in other studies, Khunti
told Reuters Health by email.
“However, some studies in black and minority ethnic populations have
higher rates of diabetes,” he said.
Although elevated blood sugar is common, estimates of how many
people will develop it in their lifetimes had not been previously
published, the study authors note. Based on these results, half of
the population with normal blood sugar will develop prediabetic
levels and may qualify for preventive lifestyle changes or
medications to reduce that risk.
All people should maintain healthy diet and exercise patterns to
reduce their diabetes risk, Khunti said.
“People should know their risk and if they are at higher risk, then
they should have a more intensive method of reducing future diabetes
risk,” he said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Li2YDU and http://bit.ly/1WZ7nb0 The Lancet
Diabetes and Endocrinology, online November 10, 2015.
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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